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The Fight for a Postpartum Psychosis Diagnosis
20 Jan
Summary
- Postpartum psychosis affects 1-2 in 1,000 births.
- Diagnosis is delayed, impacting women's mental health.
- DSM committee debates adding a distinct diagnosis.

Emily Sliwinski's harrowing experience with postpartum psychosis, initially misdiagnosed as schizophrenia, underscores the critical need for a distinct diagnosis in the DSM.
She spent 11 days in psychiatric treatment before specialists at UNC Chapel Hill identified her condition, which occurs in 1-2 in 1,000 births and is a psychiatric emergency.
Advocates argue DSM recognition would improve training and funding. However, committees are split due to concerns about precise classification within the DSM's structure.
This diagnostic debate carries high stakes, potentially influencing crucial medical training, research, and legal considerations for affected women.



